Parents though the Posterity of Enoch were taken in these followed the garbe of the world contemned and mocked Noahs feare and designe which condemned the world and them with it For that 's the next clause which is to be explained By which he condemned the World ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã he condemned and adjudged them to the Deluge And here as it was said of Athanasius Totus mundus contra Athanasian Athanasius contra totum mundum The world condemned him as foolish and his Arke as frivolous he condemnes the world by the Arke of impiety and irreligion and to destruction and ruine this an effect contrary to the former the Arke saved him and his but condemned the world in two respects 1. The Structure of the Ark which if the world had beeâ teachable had been an Instruction and Exhortation to Repentance and Reformation that while there was time it might prevent the sad judgement denounced against it for its exorbitancies and prodigious impieties And probably it is that Noâ during the time of the building of the Arke was sedulous anâ frequent in his Exhortation to amendment of life for froâ this it seems he is called a Preacher of Righteousnesse 2 Pet. 2 â and the world for not harkning to his admonitions and not oâ serving Gods long-suffering while the Arke was preparing ãâã called the disobedient World 1 Pet. 3.20 2. The event it selfe sheweth us how the Arke condemned the world before the Deluge came they mocked it but afteâ it approached they sought to it for sanctuary but could not bâ admitted when they saw the danger was unavoidable then and never till then did they beleeve it did they seek to avoid itâ Certainely when they perceived they must Drowne their vaiââ hopes and presumptions had deceived them and that the Arkâ floated above the Waters in security this sight and apprehension would confound and amaze them and force from them ãâã sentence of condemnation on themselves and a confession that they justly deserved what befell them just as it is described by the Author of the Booke of Wisedome c. 5. v. 1. ad 10. Thiâ then was their condemnation they had time to repent before the Deluge after they shall have no more time they all shall perish but Noah by the Arke is saved and by his Faith in preparing it is entituled and made Heire of that Righteousnesse which is by Faith Became Heire he succeeded Abel and Enoch in the honour and reward of Righteousnesse and of that Righteousnesse which is by Faith an Evangelicall not Legall Righteousnesse an Heire not by birth but by Adoption not by workes of the Law but Faith which Righteousnesse of Faith is two-fold One imputed which Faith embraceth and apprehendeth The other inhaerent which Faith produceth and actuateth The first is perfect because it is Christs Righteousnesse accepted as ours and is nothing else but the remission of our sinnes and the acceptation of our persons in and for Christ The second is imperfect because of sinne dwelling in our members yet requiâed of us it being the Character and Seale of Gods Spirit within âs or assurance of our Heireship and fruit of our Adoption ând in plaine termes it is the mortification of sinnes and lusts ând a sincere purpose and endeavour of a new life in righteousnesse and holinesse which Noah in some degrees performing thereby obtained the power and right to become the sonne of God heire of that other righteousnesse which is by faith that âs this as to Noah so to us conveyes estates seales and raâifies our Adoption and after possession of Heaven which faith âerives and communicates to us for and by the mercies of God ân the merits of Jesus Christ for in the Gospel-sense Son and Heire are termini aequipollentes as every Heire is a Son so every âon is an Heire too for if a Son then an Heire Gal. 4.7 If Children and Children we are by faith in Jesus Christ Gal. 3. â6 then Heires Heires of God and coheires with Christ the onely begotten the well-beloved Son Rom. 8.17 by and from whom we receive the Spirit of Adoption whereby we try Abba Father which is also in the Apostles expression the being Heire of the World Rom. 4.13 not of this sublunary transient cheating world but the new world the world to come Heb. 2.5 the promised and expected new Heavens and new Earth 2 Pet. 3.13 Thus it is declared The meeke shall inherit the Earth Mat. 5.5 not this Earth full of fraud violence and injustice but that wherein righteousnesse dwelleth for they are were and so counted themselves verse 13.14 of this Chapter Strangers and Pilgrims here on Earth their hopes their inheritance their countrey is in that new Jerusalem which is above eternall in the Heavens Come Inherit c. saith our Saviour Mat. 25.24 Adam had no further grant no larger conscession then a Legall Possession an Earthly Paradise and his estate was contingent subject to mutation and change Moses his assurances and demises to the Jews were confined to the Land of Canaan more he could not grant or secure but the supernaturall heavenly possession incorruptible undefiled that fadeth not away is reserved for and made over to the heires of that righteousnesse which is by faith which that we may obtaine and enjoy to all Eternity let us follow after and pracrise holinesse and righteousnesse according to these following is structions from the words thus cleered The Second Part. 1. This warning of God unto Noah confirmes the Apostle description of faith Faith is the substance c. If God threateâ any judgement or promise any mercy the judgement is as certaine as if it were executed and the mercy as sure as if possessed though they have no actuall being in themselves yeâ Gods word gives them a certaine subsistence and our beleife oâ his word give us a certaine assurance of the truth and issue Gods power and veracity makes all his threats and promises unavoidable and infallible and our faith makes them evident anâ secure to us and we thereby depending on Gods truth and faithfulnesse gather both confidence and assurance For thus thââ Apostle argues Let us beleeve without wavering for he ãâã faithfull that promised Heb. 10.33 and thus he positively concludes Faith depends on the Word of God Rom. 10.17 Indeeâ the Word of God is not declared to us in the latter Age as iâ was to Noah for he had this warning either by immediate Revelation from God himselfe or by the Embassie of one or more Angels but to us Gods warnings and oracles are transmitted and signified by the writings of the Prophets and Apostles yet the obligations of our faith are equall and alike for whensoever God issueth forth his Revelations and Declarations to menâ he therewith gives them assurances they have like expresses of his will besides the certitudinem objecti the certainty of the Revelations themselves which are infallably true because the Decree is of the Spirit of Truth who
which hardly admits of any suggestions or perswasions of comfort Rachel Weeping for her Children would not be comforted c. Jer. 31.15 And the holy Spirit when he would expresse the violence and distemperature of this Passion of Griefe and the bitternesse of the Grieved Phtaseth it a Mourning for an onely Son Make thee Mourning as for an onely Sonne most bitter lamentation Jer. 6.26 which expression is also used Amos 8.10 And yet there is another incentive of his affection In Isaac all the degrees of love were not onely united and concentred but were strongly rooted and unalterably setled by his long conversation with him For now if we beleeve Ioseplias Isaac was five and twenty yeares old and it s usually observed that as Children grow in accomplishments and yeares so our loves are fixed and radicated And Abraham had reason to be so for Isaac was a rarely accomplished Person with all the ornaments of Nature and Grace so that his Faith and Obedience hath by some been parallelled and by others preferred to Abrahams And it is by many disputed whether Abrahams Obedience or Isaacs Patience deserved ãâã higher repute Adde unto all these that the Death of an oneââ Sonne whether by diseases or violence is a tragicâll thought ãâã the Parent but then for the Father to Kill him and he whâ gave him life to be his Eâeentioner seems to be not onely against reason and the affections of natures but also directââ against the Precepts of Religion and dietates of Piety And therefore 2. Let us observe what Arguments Religion might fraââ to prejudice the designe what Apology Abraham might draââ from Divine Oracles to deny the Fact For in him Abraham did not onely destroy an onely Sonne but all Mankind for ãâã his hopes of a Posterity so the hope of the Gentiles and ãâã glory of the People Israel were sounded in the Person of Isâââ For In eius persina perire videbatur tota muâdo salus as Cââvin It seemed at once to frustrate all the Promises and ãâã anticipate the Salvation of the World nay further it seemâââ contradict not onely Gods goodnesse but his will For he wââleth not the Death of a sinner neither doth he so much as pââmit or allow one man to take the life of another he that ãâã is a Murderer a transgressor of the Divine Will revealed ãâã Scripture and a most proportionable just Punishment is thâââned and commanded He that sheddith Mans Blood by Mââ shall his Blood he shed Much lesse doth he approve of Human Sacrifices The Devill indeed is a Lyar and a Murtherer ãâã the Beginning he delights in Blood and those are his best ãâã wants and fittest agents whose feet are swift to shed Blood ãâã it is his delight to have our Sonnes and Daughters offered to his and so at once it seems directly to thwart and oppose all former Laws and to null and voyd all the Promises to depriââ Abraham of a Sonne and the World of Salvation to cut ãâã and câshiere his hope of Posterity and the World of restauration by the Promised Seed the Messias who was to be derivââ from Isaac These and many more such Objections would a carnall heaââ have framed from these premised Apologies of Nature and Religion but Faith confutes all these and whatsoever can be prââtended by the definitive sentence of two universall and insallibly true Propositions God is True God is Just and both Nature that is in this sense right reason and all Religion will subscribe to the truth and evidence of both for as it is the minimum quod sic of naturall Religion to assent to this truth that God is which is so Universally acknowledged by all people of all sorts so right reason will undeniably conclude from that first principle of Nature and Religion That whatsoever God that all being shall reveale is most true and whatsoever he shall command is most just and as therefore I cannot erre while I beleeve nothing but what he hath asserted so neither can I sinne while I doe nothing but what he hath commanded So that his Faith waved all the so mer exceptions and relyed onely on these two firme and rooted Principles Gods Fidelity and Justice Where these two considerables are presented unto us 1. The close adherence of Faith to its Object and its acquiescence and complacency in that adherence none of all those suggestions of carnality nor any humane reasonings could remove his Faith from its hold nor shake its resolutions no violences could beate it from its rocke whatsoever flesh and blood can pretend to the contrary his confidence and assurance is still the same its fortresse and refuge for to this was he driven and this he will keep and stand to that God hath promised and that he will effectuate what he hath promised and whatsoever seeming impossibilities are opposed he can effect what he pleaseth he can rayse Children to Abraham out of stones and by death bring them to life Psal 46.1 c. This was the substance of the three Childrens answer to Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3.16.17 and the ground of Jobs resolution Job 13.15 2. The method which Faith useth to resist such temptations it granteth all the premised considerations but superaddes more weighty and considerable to be thought upon it rejecteth no proposall of nature no overture of reason but by an over-ruling Power maketh nature to resolve contrary to its own propensions and reason to reconcile what of it selfe it could not advancing but indeed bending it to Divine Mysteries and so doth not destroy Nature but perfect it doth not over throââ reason but exalts it and regulates both for supposing the excuses of nature good and binding yet Faith sores high anâ views that which nature cannot see and embraceth what shâ cannot comprehend that though death deprive Isaac of a present being yet that God who gave Power to dead Abraham tâ beget and dead Sarah to conceive him hath as much power tâ raise him from death and returne him againe No question hâ grieved as for his onely Sonne in the bitternesse of his Spirit and so nature had his worke for he was no Stoicall antipassionist yet Faith which indeed is its proper worke comfort him and assures him that God according to his immutability and infallibility of his Promise would not take him away forever and so againe admitting the reasons enforced from Religious premises Faith resolves upon higher principles Gods Soveraigne authority his omnipotency his Attributes of Power Wisedome Justice c. as hath been declared and forbidden us either to dispute his commands or distrust his attributeââ Let Flesh and Blood Argue If Isaac be sacrificed the Promise are frustrated Faith denies the consequence and is affirmativeâ God is not tyed to this or that way for the performance of hiâ Promise that his wayes are above our wayes his thoughts abovâ our thoughts as the Heaven is higher then the Earth And thus Abraham beleeved for he considered his Faith was ãâã
rash praesumptuous fancy but a sober and advised meditationâ that God was able c. It is the wise mans advice and counselâ In time of prosperity rejoyce in time of adversity consider Eccleâ 7.16 consider Gods Almighty greatnesse infinite wisedomeâ absolute power inexpressable goodnesse and undisputable truthâ and thou shalt never fall thou mayest be tossed but shalt noâ sinke thou mayest be shaken but not removed thou mayest be afflicted yet not in distresse Persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but not destroyed 2 Cor. 4.8.9 this was the confidence and reliefe of Saint Pauls sadnesses and afflictions Eveâ to trust in God which raiseth the dead who delivered us c. 2 Cor. 1.9.10 this was his perswasion That neither life nor death nor Angels c. Rom. 8.38.39 O that we were wise to consider these excellencies these resolutions and understand the loving kindnesse of the Lord that we would consider and remember that he brought light out of darknesse order out of confusion all being from nothing and he is the same God still in Power in Wisedom in Goodnesse his Eare is not heavie nor his hands shortned unlesse our sins cause him to hide his face from us that he will not heare And lastly consider Abraham to be like this your Father in the resolutions and endeavours of obedience both Active and Passive Isay 51.1.2 Consider Abraham your Father c. and remember that God blessed and encreased him he considered God was able c. and so he received c. which affords another Observation 8. He received him It is Gods mercies that we are not consumed Lamt 3.22 God gave him unto Abraham the second time he will alwayes have his Church to remaine and though for a time she be over-clouded with Heresies Persecutions and Interests yet Magna est Veritas c. the gates of Hell shall not prevaile against her she will be most Christian in her most persecuted and afflicted condition and many times God delivers her from her Persecutors making her darkenesse to be âight and bringing againe the Captivity of Sion as in a Dreame And as it fares with the Church so with its severall Members they are many times brought out of the deep Waters and the stiffe mire light springing up to them that are true of heart as it is said Light came to the Jewes Ester 8.16 upon the discovery and disappointment of Hamans cruelty 9. Abraham offered his Sonne and saved him he received with an addition a Lambe and with a blessing and assurance of blessing In thy Seed c. to give to God what he demandeth is a great act of justice because he demands we give him nothing but what is first his and it s the best policy the surest way both to preserve and improve his gift we never offer any thing to God but we are gainers by it we receive either an hundreth sold for the present or Eternall Life Give our Persons our Soules and Bodies to him to serve and worship him in feare and though upon that score the Soule be seperated and the Body crucified we shall receive both againe with inexpressible advantages give your substance and goods to the necessitated members of Christs body and though we spend much this way we shall save much more decima divet este we shall gainâ and raise an estate He hath distributed and given to the poore his righteousnesse remaineth c. that one was of improvement his horne shall be exalted with honour that 's a second way both certain Psal 112.9 and so this kinde of distribution is a way of provision for the future and therefore called a laying up a stake of a good foundation 1 Tim. 6.19 a Treasury a Magazine 10. He received him in a figure ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã though Faith received not the expected reward and effect which it apprehendeth as being inexpedient either for the present or future condition of the Beleever yet it receives what God awards the hope of the righteous shall not perish and they that put their trust in him shall not be confounded but many times before beliefe comes we are at the last experience the Altar is prepared Isaac bound and is layd upon it and Abraham takes the knife in hand ready to give the fatall stroke but then and ââtill then not before did the Angel step in for a rescue anâ dilivered Isaac from death and so Abraham received him byâ resemblance of the Resurrection and thus Christ delivereth hiâ Church when overwhelmed with oppressors reviveth her when she is in the dust when she is but a company of dead men appointed as sheep to be slaine and numbred for destruction when she is dry bones and her hopes cleane off he will put breatâ and life into them These and such like are the similitudeâ oâ parables which the holy Spirit useth to expresse the affliction and deliverance of his Church Isay 26.19 Ezek. 37.5.6.7 c. And having gone thus far I might a while stay on the mysticall and parabolicall signification of those Texts for so somâ Interprets these words he received him in a figure that 's in reference to Christ whose Death and Resurrection were here prââ figured And Augustine tells us That this action of Abrahams was both factum prophetia an History and a Prophesie but I intend not to vary much from my resolved Method and ãâã for a conclusion shall onely observe the two commendatory ãâã of Abrahams Faith which is noted to be 1. Obedientiall working acting Faith be offered and this was the working of the Faith Iames 2.21 The former propoââ salls and calls of God to Abraham were for the tryalls of his âaith in that particular and instance of beleeving his Promises âut this was a new tryall of his Faith in another expression and determination even that of obedience to his commands God sometimes tryeth our Faith by Promises of incredible things whether then we will depend on him sometimes by commands âf harsh unpleasant services or duties whether we will submit to him and obey him now when God puts us to it to evidence our Faith either by patience or obedience if we doe not we are not the sons of Abraham not the friends of God For true Faith will still approve it selfe so by faithfull actions no temptations of the world or the Devill to the contrary shall make us suspect or disbeleeve what he hath promised no invitations of sin or lust shall lay us off from the practise of what âe commands where fire is there is heate and light where âaith there holinesse and obedience 2. Rationall it was not a rash precipitate or temerarious deâgne but a wise sober deliberate proceeding of his understanding will and affection for all his spirituall faculties were imployed in this consideration of Faith ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã he pondered ând weighed with himselfe secum perpendens in one Translation âatiocinatus in another his understanding considered Gods Truth Power c. and upon
this concluded That he could and would performe his Promises his will followed the dictates of his understanding and resolved it was good and just to beâeeve in God and obey him and then all his affections follow with cheerefulnesse and readinesse to act what the understanding proposed and proved and the will adhered to as good we finne ând fall from one uncleannesse to another we distrust God and waste our selves with impatience and fretfulnesse of spirit and all because we are not wise considering men we advise not with or hearken not to reason but are wilfully deceived and seduced by interest and passion pride or prejudice or some raging just in our wills and affections that seeing we doe not see and hearing c. It remains as a duty of Faith to be considering and serious and sober in our obedience to God Which that we may be one act more of Faith and Obedience is yet behinde and that is Prayer The third Part. The Prayer O Holy Father the Father of the Spirits of all flesh who requires of thy servants reasonable services renew us in onâ minds that we prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God that we may present our bodies a living Sacrifice holy and acceptable to God Let no suggestions of Satan ãâã seducements of the world be ever able to shake us or make ãâã falter in our beleife of thy Promises Let no allurements of pleasure profit or vaine-glory make us to disobey thy Commandâ O thou the God of Abraham who dignified him with those Titles of Father of the Faithfull and Friend of God bestow ãâ¦ã such measure of grace make our Faith so holy and obedientiaâ that we may shew and evidence our selves the Children of Abraham doing the workes of Abraham that so we may be accounted also the Friends of God O let us sincerely and heartiâ surrender our selves to Christ firmely rely on all his promises especially those which concernes the eternall salvation of our immortall soules faithfully obey whatsoever he hath commanded us and doe act and move whensoever he is pleased to try us according to the Principles of our Faith the Fundamentals of ãâã Religion Gods truth and justice that we never dis-beleeve the formen or dis-obey the latter and that we constantly resolve tâ beleeve whatsoever he hath revealed because he cannot lye and to practise whatsoever he shall or hath commanded because hââ is most just To which onely wise God our Saviour be Glory and Majesty Dominion and Power now and for ever Amen ISAACKS Prophesie Heb. 11.20 By Faith Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau concerning things to come ISaac followes his Father in the Catalogue Sequiturque patrem non passibus aquis his Elogies are not so high nor so numerous as the reports were of his Fathers faith yet what is recited of him is truely Patriarchall and belongeth to him both as the Successor of the Promise and as the next immediate Heire both of his Fathers Possessions and Honours he was the first in the entaile and what was setled on him he transmits and passeth over to Jacob and Esun to Jacob as his next successor in the federall blessing In thy Seed shall all the Nations of the Earth be blessed he bequeathes the prerogative of prime-geniture being Heire of the Promise Gen. 27.27.28.29 And to Esan he consignes an estate or portion of temporalties because he had forfeited his Birthright and his Title to it Gen. 27.39.40 and both these he passed over to them by the Spirit of Prophesie and the eye of Faith For by Faith Isaac c. The first Part. In this Discourse I shall discusse these following Quaries wherein if I shall mistake I shall leave every one to his indifferency of judgement 1. How this benediction of Isaac could be an act or emanation of Faith which was procured by fraud and subtilty and was granted besides and contrary to the intention of the demisor The Solution of this Quaere may be thus given Isaac by faith apprehended the certainty and truth of this prediction for he was firmely perswaded that the contents of his Prophesie should ãâã fulfilled onely he mistook in one single circumstance of ãâã Person concerning which it should be verified and so thouââ he knew not Jacob was the subject of the blessing and so dâsigned by God the chiefe donor or at least which in effect ãâã all one did not remember or observe it yet assured he was thââ that blessing so conferred could not faile but should stand again all opposition and hold firme and legall to all intents and puâposes and therefore he was positive and peremptory I ãâã blessed him yea and he shall be blessed Gen. 27.33 and thâ very affirmation is to me a ground of conjecture that Isâââ now saw the error of his first thoughts and was satisfied thââ thus it was to be and thus it should or ought to be as ãâã now he had stated it and that Isaac was now taught by a spâciall instinct from God which Divines conclude from these circumstances 1. Isaac for his over-affection to Esau is correctââ by blindnesse and so prepared to see and correct his error 2 ãâã longed for Venison and would not passe it till he had the Veââson which he might have done without any such delatory coâdition 3. That notwithstanding his frequent use of Venisoâ he was deceived with Kids flesh 4. That though he perceivââ him to be Jacob by his Voyce yet he blessed him 5. That Esââ all the time the businesse was transacted at home was sent abroââ And lastly that after all this though he complained of the fraââ yet he confirmed and ratified the promised blessing to lâââ But if it be further demanded how Isaac could mistake or ignorant of the Person to be blessed inasmuch as from Heaââ he was ascertained that Rebekah had two great Nations in ãâã wombe but the greater should serve the lesser the answer mââ be 1. That that Prophesie was not so cleare as that he could ââderstand it without the assistance of a further Revelation 2. ãâã strong affection to Esau did possibly obliterate it which couââ not admit of any jealousie against him for usually the firââ borne as they have the start and advantage to gaine our ãâã and therefore most ardent affections so they retaine and hoâ what by this Priviledge is indulged them and the reason ãâã this may be because that naturall propension generare ãâã simile in some sort is satisfied at the Nativity of the Firââ borne who are the first representations of our selves Now for the other member of the Quaere the procurement of the blessing by fraud and forgery this may much reflect upon Rebekahs credit who by this fact seems to oppose a Divine Ordinance to abuse her Husbands simplicity and her Sonnes tendernesse and not a little toucheth her favourite and confederate Jacobs ingenuity and honesty for though his former purchase from his Brother gave him a Right and Title
therof but the other hath only some slight acquaintance with him some pretences onely to his favour and bounty or hath onely this hope that if he come first possibly he may provaile neither hath he any friend on which he dare rely to negotiate and meditate for him therefore he Posts Night and Day stormes and frets at every obstacle quarrels and fights with every shadow of opposition and allowes himselfe no refreshment ãâã ease because his suspition and jealousie chafeth and chaseth hiâ In this ease we may certainely resolve he who made most haââ had the lesser hopes and his haste was lesse whose hopes ãâã greater and surer for he that hath a promise from a man ââ Power and faithfulnesse whereof also he hath an undoubââ assurance is not too eager or over-vehement for the performance but is willing to stay the time and pleasure of his friend neither is there amongst men any thing which makes them ââ forward for security or payment in contracts but distrust aââ dishonesty And yet this Phrase is varied by the Apostle 1 Pââ 2.6 shall not be ashamed he will not onely not make haste ââ if the merey be delayed he will not be ashamed his Faith bene him out against all inward serupulosities and outward ignoâânies if his own heart shall dictate God is slacke or if his enemies jeere and deride his confidence yet he is still the same no reproaches shall haste or deject him no carnalities seduct oâ alter him to be disappointed on his relyance and hopes thââ shames a man but to be rooted in hope is to gather considence and comfort which David observed of himselfe Psal 27 1â.14 I should have sainted except I had beleeved to see the goodnesse of the Lord c. In three things saith Bernard doe I plaâââ âny confidence and they are such as will not suffer us to be ashamed In charitate adoptionis veritate promissionis potestate redditunis for Gods goodnesse truth and power cannot faile them that trust in him and wait for the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ The third Part. The Prayer MOst mercifull and gratious Father most glorious and eternall Lord the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob blesse us thy Children by Adoption with the Dew of Heaven and Fat of the Earth blesse and prosper unto us the workes of our hands and satisfie us early with thy mereies that we may rejoyce and be glad in thy salvation give us such a proportion of temporalties as are most sutable to our dispositions and abilities but they be no temptations and provocations to sinne and let the blessings of thy right hand descend plentifully upon us thy heavenly and spirituall graces that we may grow up and flourish in the house of the Lord. Be pleased to regulate and direct all our actions to thy glory and our salvation restraine all our passions and inordinate affections and bring them under the dominion of grace Blesse and sanctifie all thy blessings upon us that we may improve them to thy Honour and our own everlasting advantage that we presse forward to the marke For the price of the high calling of God in Iesus Christ let thy promises of grace be the objects of our Faith and let our Faith rest in them that we be not confounded in the perillous time and we may waite with patience till the Sun of Righteousnesse appeare with healing in his wings Raise up our thoughts from the consideration of the present pressures and threatned calamities which may happen us to a contemplation of the love of God in Iesus Christ Adopting us and promising good things to us the truth power and faithfulnesse of God in performing the expressions of his love to us and to a setled meditation of that Eternall Rest those sure mercies and honourable felicities which the Father hath made over to us in his beloved Sonne and which he hath assured unto us by the Revelation of his Spirit To which holy blessed and undivided Trinity be ascribed all Honour Blessing Praise and Worship now and for ever Amen IACOBS Piety Heb. 11.21 By Faith Jacob when he was a dying blessed both the Sons of Joseph and worshipped leaning upon the top of his staffe OMne bonum est sui diffusivum Goodnesse is communicative of it selfe And a very Heathen can resolve us That Nullius boni sine socio jucunda est possessio there iâ no content in the possession of any goodnesse unlesse we have a Partner with us and every good man is of that temper and disposition that he freely communicates what he hath received if God blesse him he is willing others should have some part or profit with him and what he freely received he freely gives as for example If God hath bestowed a Talent of Knowledge Learning Wealth and Authority on any good Man he will imploy it teach others with his Learning enflruct with Knowledge supply with his Wealth releive and protect by his Authority or if he doe not he ceaseth to be a good Man and these advantages cease to be good things and blessings to him Abraham received a blessing from God he bequeathes this to Isanc Isaac leaves it to Jacob and Jacob imparts it to the twelve Tribes All these holy Patriarches succeeded one another in the blessings here was Personall Succession both in the Place and the Faith they Lineally descended and succeeded one another both in the Chaire as formerly the Elder Father still blessing the following and in the donative of the blessing and in the Worship and Service of God Religion it seems then was heredetary and these Patriarches came to the blessing by discent and the Legitimate Children were the Heires of the Promise and therefore as by Faith Isaac blessed Jacob and Esan so by Faith Jacob blessed both the Sonnes of Joseph By Faith Jacob when he was a dying c. The first Part. This benediction was the same which Isaac before imparted to Iacob it was Paternall Sacerdotall and Propheticall the subjects of it were the Sons of Ioseph but with this difference the whole blessing was enstated on Iacob by Isaac whereas Iacob divided it to Iudah Lovy and the Sons of Ioseph Reuben indeed was his eldest Sonne the beginning of his strength the excellency of dignity and power and so in an ordinary course it belonged to him but he forfeited his Birth-right by desiling his Fathers Bed and so his dignity was gone Gen. 49.3.4 and so the jus Regni the Kingly Dominion and Soveraignty over his Brethren was setled on Iudah the Honour and Office of Priest-hood was collated on Levis and the double Portion was allotted to the Sons of Ioseph Ephraim and Manasseh and the blessing on them was That his Name should be named on them and the Name of his Fathers Abraham and Isaac Gen. 48.16 that is they should be reputed for his Children for the Grand-children of Isaac and great Grand-children of Abraham and so the Heires of the Covenant of Promise and they